trig? you mean you find all the vectors of the forces, then you find the resultant vector by treating them like lengths?Originally posted by Constip8edSkunk
lol wog boy beat me to it
edit: triangle method is just trigonometry
Absolutely right.you mean you find all the vectors of the forces, then you find the resultant vector by treating them like lengths?
If you have two parallel wires with current travelling in the SAME direction, the two wires to ATTRACT. If the current in one of the wires goes in the OPPOSITE direction to the other, the wires will REPEL. So if you change the direction of the current in a wire, one (or possibly more) of the force vectors will be reversed in direction so your vector sum will be different.how does the direction of the current affect the resultant force on D?
The method you use to add vectors is always the same, it's just that some of the vectors will now point the other way.that does change the way you add the vectors right?
No it's 0.02*sqrt(2) metres, use Pythagoras' theorem.also, isn't length BD 0.02squared, thus d=0.02^2
isnt it 0.02sqrt(8) metres???Originally posted by wogboy
No it's 0.02*sqrt(2) metres, use Pythagoras' theorem.
Thats where I was going wrong, hits calculator... ahh that feels better.Originally posted by Constip8edSkunk
its sqrt0.0008m = 0.02*sqrt2 m